
Louis Vuitton took over an entire section of Saks Fifth Avenue when it launched its women's concept store inside the department store in 2009. As a way to fully brand the space, the luxury French fashion house and event designer David Beahm crafted an elaborate forest, which included a leaf-covered gate.
Photo: Jeff Thomas/ImageCapture

The June 25 American Academy of Hospitality Sciences' Five Star Diamond Awards ceremony took on A Midsummer Night's Dream theme, which saw Benny Ofer of Daniel Events design an enchanted garden with flower-covered stands and hanging grapevines inside the Addison in Boca Raton, Florida.
Photo: Munoz Photography

Inspired by Shaker culture, Fleurs Bella filled a raw New York space with tools, objects made from organic materials, aromatic plants, wooden doors, baskets, and other paraphernalia for the Brooklyn Academy of Music's 2007 Next Wave gala. One hallway was lined with willow and maple trees.
Photo: Alison Whittington for BizBash

Designed to resemble an overgrown—but elegant—Italian garden, Bulgari's intimate dinner for the launch of its Mon Jasmin Noir scent in 2011 had sounds of chirping birds, a cocoon-like grove of greenery, and smells of lemon, jasmine, and lily of the valley. Gold candelabra wrapped in vines, lush arrangements of white and green flowers in Italian terra-cotta compotes, sprigs of jasmine, and Meyer lemons on the branch formed the centerpieces on the long communal dining table.
Photo: Francine Daveta Photography

With the tagline, "Where the grass is greener," the March 2013 gala dinner and auction for the Georgiana Bruce Kirby Preparatory School had a garden theme. Rather than using live plants, Peggy Young & Associates covered the Santa Cruz, California, school with artificial turf, including the dining tables and the auction display where guests searched for items amidst the faux grass.
Photo: Courtesy of Peggy Young & Associates

During September Fashion Week in 2011, Alice & Olivia turned a raw studio into a whimsical garden for the showing of its latest collection. Grassy flooring, white lawn furniture, and trees hung with accessories set the scene.
Photo: BFA

Creating a garden within a garden for the Chicago Botanic Garden's Summer Dinner Dance on June 21, HMR Designs hung birdcage chandeliers strung with white lilies and covered poles with trellises in the dinner tent. Banners decorated with botanical prints of flowers added to the look.
Photo: Courtesy of the Chicago Botanic Garden

When, in 2010, Bell Canada marked its first year in a five-year funding commitment to the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, the telecommunication company's gala was designed as a journey through lush English gardens. This included surrounding an ice sculpture with bear- and deer-shaped topiaries in the reception space at the Metro Toronto Convention Centre.
Photo: Emma McIntyre for BizBash

Tables with umbrellas, an enormous photo backdrop, and warm projections turned one section of Microsoft's press preview into an outdoor café. The decor for the event during Internet Week in New York also included a few potted trees and mini buckets of sunflowers.
Photo: Anna Sekula/BizBash

Channeling English gardens as a nod to the "AngloMania" exhibition, the 2006 gala for the Metropolitan Museum of Art's Costume Institute placed tables in mini garden plots, dividing the museum's Englehard Court using espalier apple trees surrounded by blooming bulbs of daffodils, hyacinths, and ferns. Moreover, grass covered the floors, 30-foot-tall spirals of wisteria vine wrapped columns, and the dining tables were bare willow wood.
Photo: Courtesy of the Metropolitan Museum of Art

Dubbed Fleurotica, the Garfield Park Conservatory's June 12 fund-raiser was all things horticultural, including a fashion show where garments were made entirely out of plants, flowers, and ferns. At the Chicago event, brass beds with mossy, flower-covered spreads provided lounge furniture—and opportunities to snap shots—for guests.
Photo: David Miller

It may have been warm outside when Absolut introduced its Orient Apple vodka flavor in 2011, but that didn't stop the brand from turning an indoor gallery into an apple orchard. The New York launch event involved 7,000 square feet of sod, live trees, and barrels of apples, as well as picnic rugs and tree stumps.
Photo: Gustavo Campos

After hosting the reception on the elevated park, the Friends of the High Line took the dinner portion of its 2010 summer benefit in New York inside the Phillips de Pury & Company gallery. The decor from Van Wyck & Van Wyck was designed to give the various rooms of the gallery a continuous look reminiscent of the High Line and included a 600-foot-long strip of foliage suspended overhead.
Photo: Roger Dong for BizBash

To create a lush, cocoon-like setting for the seating at the 2012 Two by Two for AIDS and Art gala and auction in Dallas, Todd Fiscus covered a banquette wall in boxwood-print slipcovers and topped it off with heather and hydrangeas.
Photo: Roderick Peña

To create a forest scene to display Louis Vuitton's collection at its Saks Fifth Avenue concept store launch, David Beahm used five kinds of mosses, built life-size trees using branches wound around metal frames, and decorated the area with other leafy plants.
Photo: Jeff Thomas/ImageCapture

Mimicking the scenery found at summer camps, Groupon's camp-inspired "urban adventure" in July 2012 put bundled logs, boat paddles, and plenty of foliage inside the Swissôtel Chicago.
Photo: Sheri Whitko Photography

A parklike scene with swings, croquet, trees, benches, lampposts, and grass formed the casual vignette at a New York gallery for Google's November 2010 launch of Boutiques.com.
Photo: Allan Zepeda Photography

Target remodeled a New York gallery space into a Parisian street scene for the press preview of its Jason Wu collection in January 2012. At the center of the space was the town square, which included an enormous, fountain-like floral arrangement. Elsewhere, black-and-white decals, lampposts, and trees added to the outdoor look.
Photo: Nilaya Sabnis

The "Enchanted Forest of Curiosities" pop-up from Hendrick's Gin in December 2011 put moss-covered woodland creatures, fabric-draped trees, tree-stump stools, glitter-specked dirt, and fake snow in a vacant Brooklyn storefront.
Photo: Fine Young Man Productions

As part of the immersive setting for the 2012 BIO International Convention's welcome reception in Boston, Chicago-based company Kehoe Designs created a Japanese garden inspired by the country's shogun era.
Photo: John Kreis Photography

During Fashion Week in New York in February 2012, Tommy Hilfiger fashioned an elaborate set that resembled a gated garden. The showing of the designer's men’s and women's collections at the Park Avenue Armory saw attendees seated at café tables, chairs, and benches, and a brick runway bordered with gravel and artificial maple trees.
Photo: Jamie McCarthy/WireImage

At a press preview in December 2011, Sears and Kmart created a garden setting indoors, avoiding New York's rainy end-of-year weather. The look included live canaries, a working fountain, kites, park benches, trees, and a picnic table.
Photo: Anna Sekula/BizBash

Chanel took its Numéros Privés exhibition to Las Vegas in January 2012. As part of the installation, the French brand turned the promenade at the Wynn Las Vegas into a private garden, using camellia trees to surround vitrines of flowers and jewelry.
Photo: Billy Farrell/BFAnyc.com

In 2005, Avon created an indoor park to preview its Mark line of cosmetics. A wrought-iron gate opened to four vignettes, which included a small faux maple tree with orange and red foliage and teardrop-shaped glass candleholders suspended from the branches, red umbrellas hovering over a wooden park bench and moss-covered pedestals, and warm yellow lighting.
Photo: Jamie Watts

Held at an industrial site on the Hudson River, the Whitney Museum of American Art's 2011 fall gala projected warmth and intimacy through the use of live maple trees, thousands of daisies, and candlelight.
Photo: Caleb Ferguson for BizBash

Fluf makes durable, reusable lunch and snack bags (from $18; bulk pricing available) that can be customized.
Photo: Courtesy of Fluf

A branded leather luggage tag and passport case ($83 for the set; bulk pricing available) from Graphic Image comes in several colors and embossed finishes.
Photo: Courtesy of Graphic Image

Baggu offers a range of carryall bags, including the recycled cotton canvas Duck tote ($24; bulk pricing available) that can be screen-printed.
Photo: Courtesy of Baggu

The squares and panels come in an off-white shade that can be lit for color effect.
Photo: Courtesy of Atomic Rentals

In addition to 22.5- by 22.5-foot plastic squares, the SuperLever collection also includes 15- by 45-foot fabric panels.
Photo: Courtesy of Atomic Rentals

The mix-and-match SuperLever squares and panels feature various designs and can function as backdrops.
Photo: Courtesy of Atomic Rentals